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David Booth, ’71, one of our most celebrated graduates, gave a gift valued at $300 million to the Graduate School of Business at the University of Chicago in 2008.
In recognition of Booth’s historic gift, the school was renamed the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. With an unparalleled commitment to the institution, Booth serves as a lifetime member of the school’s business advisory council and on the Board of Trustees of the University of Chicago.
A Historic Gift
When David Booth gave a gift valued at $300 million to the business school in 2008, it was the largest gift in the history of the University of Chicago. It was also the largest gift ever given to any business school in the world. An extraordinary expression of support, the gift has been transformative in building and sustaining Chicago Booth’s eminence and its position as the leading academic business school in the nation.
Support for Transformative Research
At the time of the gift announcement, Booth said it was a gesture of gratitude for what the school had given him and that he wanted to give the school the means to do great things in the future. An important part of that is supporting faculty in creating world-changing research.
“I wouldn’t have been anywhere without Chicago. What was going on at Chicago then really changed the way people think about investing. Every new paper coming out was a landmark paper. Based on all this work, we’ve improved lives.” — David Booth, ’71, Founder and Executive Chairman, Dimensional Fund Advisors
Historic Impact
Booth’s historic gift has been transformative in helping us recruit and retain top scholars, advance field-defining research, and build Chicago Booth’s position as the leading academic business school in the nation.
Here are just a few of the most recent accomplishments of the school and of our faculty:
2013
Booth professors Eugene F. Fama, MBA ’63, PhD ’64, and Lars Peter Hansen win the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences “for their empirical analysis of asset prices.”
2013
2017
Booth’s Richard H. Thaler wins the Nobel Prize “for his contributions to behavioural economics.”
2017
2018
Chicago Booth is named the No. 1 business school in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.
2018
2019
Booth professor Marianne Bertrand is the first recipient of the Jan Söderberg Family Prize in Economics and Management, in recognition of her scholarship in issues including inequality, discrimination, and sexism.
2019
2019
Forbes and the Economist rank Chicago Booth as the best business school in the United States.
David Booth has a long tradition of support for the school. In 1999, he made a $10 million gift to support the fund-raising campaign for the Charles M. Harper Center, which houses Chicago Booth’s Full-Time MBA Program and the Stevens Doctoral Program, as well as its research centers and institutes. Harper Center opened in 2004.
“I’ve had such a terrific adult life,†Booth told Chicago Booth Magazine at the time of the gift, “and the University of Chicago has been a big part of why I’ve been able to live the way I have.â€
About David Booth
David Booth, ’71, serves as a lifetime member of the school’s business advisory council and on the Board of Trustees of the University of Chicago. A founder of Dimensional Fund Advisors in 1981, Booth serves as the firm’s executive chairman.
Booth has won numerous awards for his accomplishments in applying financial theory and research to the practical world of asset management, particularly for his pioneering work in indexing and small capitalization investing.
A true pathbreaker, Booth won InvestmentNews’ Icons and Innovators Award in 2017. In 2016, he was named to Forbes’s Money Masters list, which recognizes the 40 most powerful people in the financial world; that same year, Institutional Investor honored him with the Manager Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2012, Booth was named Financial Management Association International’s Outstanding Financial Executive, and in 2010, InvestmentNews named him one of the Power 20 in the financial services industry.
A member of the board of trustees of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Booth also serves on the board of overseers for the University of Chicago’s . David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium at the University of Kansas was also named in his honor.
In addition to his MBA from the University of Chicago, Booth has an MS and a BA from the University of Kansas.
David Booth: Milestones
1946
Born in Lawrence, Kansas.
1968
Earned his BA in economics from the University of Kansas.
1969
Earned a master’s degree from the University of Kansas. The David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium is named in his honor.
1969
Decided to attend the University of Chicago after learning about the efficient-market hypothesis.
1971
Graduated from the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business with an MBA.
1971
Joined Wells Fargo Bank, where he worked on one of the first index funds.
1981
With Rex Sinquefield, ’72, and others, founded Dimensional Fund Advisors, the first financial company to utilize Fama’s ideas.
2008
Gave a gift valued at $300M to the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business.
2018
Furthered his commitment to philanthropy by joining the Giving Pledge.
The University of Chicago Medal
In 2018, the University of Chicago Board of Trustees awarded the University of Chicago Medal to David Booth in recognition of the profound impact of his philanthropic support and deep commitment to the university and to Chicago Booth.
Established in 1976, the University of Chicago Medal recognizes distinguished service of the highest order to the university by an individual or couple.
Joseph Neubauer, ’65: 00:05
I’m delighted that we’ve come together to celebrate one of the university’s most dedicated and generous supporters, David Booth. Tonight marks an exciting milestone in his longstanding relationship with the university. David’s philanthropy has allowed the school to continue to produce influential ideas, as well as great leaders.
Robert J. Zimmer: 00:27
David shares the deep commitment of the university to rigor, to inquiry, to analysis, to intellectual challenge, and to intellectual integrity.
Joseph Neubauer, ’65: 00:37
In 2008, he pledged $300 million to support and rename what is now the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. It was and remains the largest gift in the university’s history.
Robert J. Zimmer: 00:52
It is a gift of humility, reflecting not just financial generosity, but a deep generosity of recognition of others, and it is a gift, like all great gifts, of a commitment beyond oneself.
David Booth, ’71: 01:10
We used to walk through Reynolds Club here, and you couldn’t walk through this building without getting besieged with all kinds of materials and literature about one cause or another. I go, “I want to be part of that change.†Improving people’s lives by applying these new ideas really became my public purpose. And so that eventually led to the motivation for creating the gift. So it’s been a fantastic experience. I've been so proud to be part of it. I know you could find people that deserve more than I do, but I can assure you, nobody appreciates it more than I do. Thank you.
The cofounder, chairman, and co-CEO of Dimensional Fund Advisors shares his thoughts on leadership, creativity, and why it’s a great time to get an MBA.